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| Syndicate: Macedonia briefing 10 may 01 |
>From ebalkan@soros.org.mk
Date: Sun, 6 May 2001 13:49:04 +0200
"EURO-BALKAN" INSTITUTE ON MACEDONIAN
CRISIS
10-05-2001
CONTENTS:
- Daily briefing from Macedonian press about
Macedonian crisis
- Daily briefing from international press about
Macedonian crisis
SUPPLEMENT 1: HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH LETTER TO
MACEDONIAN PRESIDENT BORIS TRAJKOVSKI
SUPPLEMENT 2: HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH LETTER TO NLA
POLITICAL SPOKESMAN ALI AHMETI
a) DAILY BRIEFING FROM MACEDONIAN PRESS ABOUT
MACEDONIAN CRISIS
THE FIGHTING WITH THE TERRORISTS IN THE KUMANOVO
REGION IS SETTLING
The Macedonian security forces yesterday in
several rounds only answered with artillery fire
to the armed provocations of the terrorist
groups in the village Slupchane. In Vaksince,
where the most intense fighting went on the day
before yesterday, the situation yesterday was
calm. The local inhabitants don=92t answer to the
ultimatums set by the Macedonian Army and police
to leave their homes. The terrorists haven=92t yet
released the soldier of the Macedonian Army and
the two captured civilians. =93The Albanian media
announced information that the Macedonian
security forces act against the civilians and
that the Macedonian side had great losses. I
claim that the security forces do not attack
civilian targets, nor do we have losses=94, stated
the spokesman of the Defense Ministry, Gjorgji
Trendafilov. (=93DNEVNIK=94)
THE MACEDONIAN ARMY HELPED TWO JURNALISTS ESCAPE
SLUPCHANE
Yesterday, around 9:00, an armored vehicle of
the TV Network BBC with the reporter Nicholas
Wood and a cameraman, was struck with a shell in
the neighborhood of the village Slupchane, there
were no casualties in this event. According to
the spokesman of the Macedonian Army
Headquarters, colonel Blagoja Markovski, for an
unknown reason, the two BBC journalists with
their translator, a Macedonian Albanian, were in
the vicinity of a terrorist machine-gun nest,
when action by the Macedonian Army Units was
conducted. The Defense Ministry spokesman,
Gjorji Trendafilov, refused to comment on how
the team succeeded to enter the village. The
international Red Cross yesterday didn=92t attempt
to enter the village Slupchane to pull the
members of the British network team out from the
village, so they remained in Opae. That is when
the Macedonian security forces conducted an
action to pull them out of there. Both
journalists were taken away from the village and
transferred to Kumanovo for an informative
questioning, after that they were free to go.
The translator expressed a desire to stay in the
village. Yesterday at 6:30 from the village
Slupchane, help from the Internal Affairs
Ministry and the Macedonian Army was asked by an
American journalist team, there is some
information that this is a team of the
=93Washington Post=94. They asked the police to pull
them out from the village where at that moment
there were provocations from the terrorists and
artillery fire by the security forces. Yesterday
two Turkish nationals were pulled out from the
village Lipkovo. (=93DNEVNIK=94)
MERCENARIES-MUJAHEDINS ARE POSITIONED IN VITINA
Paramilitary units of the mercenaries-
mujahedins, mainly from the former Second
Sandzak Brigade from the Bosnian war, are headed
towards Macedonia, claim unofficial police
sources, based on information from the Security
and Counterintelligence Administration in the
Internal Affairs Ministry. The same sources for
the newspaper =93Utrinski Vesnik=94 say that these
paramilitary units have already arrived and are
located in the training camps in the border
region at Vitina on the Yugoslav-Macedonian
border with Kosovo. According to
counterintelligence information, they are to
enter our northern border in several groups. The
mercenaries on their way robbed houses and
properties of former state companies. The
=93connection=94 between the mujahedins and the
local population, according to police sources,
allegedly, is the 60 year-old Muslim priest from
the village Slupchane, with excellent knowledge
of Arabian. The representative -turned soldier
of the NLA, Hisni Shaciri, is also in the
village Slupchane, in a house in the north part
of the village. This house, as well as the NLA
headquarters was one of the first targets of the
helicopter attacks of the Macedonian security
forces. (=93UTRINSKI VESNIK=94)
K-FOR POSITIONED NEW FORCES TOWARDS MACEDONIA
K-for positioned a significant military presence
on the Macedonian-Yugoslav border with Kosovo,
in order to secure the border as well as
possible and are convinced that the last
undertakings have great effect ,it is said in
today=92s announcement by the K-for. In the
announcement it is said that the K-for in the
past several weeks have responded accordingly to
the concern of the Macedonian Government and
conducted intense and successful military
actions along the border. On the information
that was spread in the Macedonian media that
armed troops are freely crossing the Macedonian-
Yugoslav border with Kosovo, K-for reacted to
all the requests from the Macedonian Defense
Ministry for these groups to be met and made
additional effort to secure the border. (=93NOVA
MAKEDONIJA=94)
THE NEW GOVERNMENT WILL HAVE TO WAIT FOR ONE
MORE WEEK
The creation of a grand government coalition,
yesterday discussed the fulfillment of the
conditions of the PDP (Party for Democratic
Prosperity) for ceasefire and changes to the
Macedonian Constitution, as well as the share of
ministerial resources and leadership and
managerial positions in the lower structures of
the state government. Because of this the
forming of the new government will most probably
have to wait until next week. The PDP didn=92t
hold the announced meeting of the party
leadership on which a definitive standing on the
entering in the new government coalition was to
be brought. It is hard to predict when this
meeting will be held. As we are informed, the
reason for this situation is the standpoint of
this party that they still haven=92t received the
requested guarantees from the future coalition
partners. =93First of all, we don=92t have a solid
guarantee by the SDSM (Social Democratic Union
of Macedonia), that they will agree to the
change of the Constitution. On the other hand,
we were assured by the international
representatives that we will be submitted a
draft version of the changes in the Macedonian
Constitution that is supposed to represent a
compromise for the overcoming of the current
crisis=94, say our sources in the PDP. SDSM=92s
spokesman, Vlado Buchkovski, denies that on the
last meeting with the EU representative, Javier
Solana, he, Mr. Solana, pressured them to agree
to the changes of the constitutional
regulations. In the SDSM, they are at the
opinion that the PDP has problems with the DPA
because of their request to get as well the
Ministry of Economy aside from the resource of
justice, which will most probably not be given
up by Arben Xhaferi=92s party. (=93DNEVNIK=94)
b) DAILY BRIEFING FROM INTERNATIONAL PRESS ABOUT
MACEDONIAN CRISIS
</color>NEW SKOPJE COALITION CALMS NERVES
Multi-ethnic coalition government has taken over
Macedonia in a desperate effort to avert all-out
war. But the rumble of distant artillery as
Macedonian troops battle with Albanian
guerrillas in the north threatens to fracture
the coalition before it even starts work.
The new government was put together painfully
after strenuous prodding from George Robertson,
the NATO secretary-general, and Javier Solana,
the European Union's high representative. It was
Robertson who warned, "Macedonia is on the edge
of an abyss". One coalition element, the Party
for Democratic Prosperity, PDP, signed up on
Tuesday but less than a day later threatened to
walk out unless the army called a cease-fire
within three days. The PDP is an opposition
group representing the country's Albanian
minority. The birth of the new government was
difficult. Negotiations lasted several weeks and
came to a crisis when Prime Minister Ljubco
Georgievski announced he was seriously thinking
of introducing a state of war to deal with the
Albanian guerrilla group, the National
Liberation Army, NLA, which has been attacking
Macedonian forces along the northern border. The
new national unity government includes the VMRO-
DPMNE party of Prime Minister Georgievski along
with the DPA and LP (Liberal Party), which were
all in the former government. They are joined by
the two main opposition groups, the Macedonian
SDSM (Social Democratic Alliance of Macedonia)
and the PDP. The SDSM will probably share its
functions with two smaller opposition groups,
the LDP (Liberal Democratic Party) and VMRO-
VMRO. According to the agreement, opposition
groups will get the ministries of defense,
foreign affairs, health-care and ecology as well
as a deputy prime minister post. VMRO-DPMNE will
head the ministries of interior, finance,
culture, education and agriculture. It is
possible that VMRO-DPMNE will give the education
ministry to the newly formed New Democracy
Party. DPA has been promised the ministries of
labor and social policy, economy and local self-
government as well as one deputy prime minister
position. The PDP will have the ministry of
justice and one minister without portfolio post.
Georgievski remains government head. (IWPR) A
government spokesman, Antonio Milosovski, said
the main ruling and opposition parties,
representing majority Slavs and minority
Albanians, had agreed on a coalition government
which will include 96 of the country's 120 MPs.
In return, the opposition parties were promised
an early election next January. (The Guardian)
ARMY POUNDING PRODUCES FIRST CRACKS IN
MACEDONIAN UNITY COALITION
The Macedonian army intensified its artillery
shelling of northern villages held by ethnic
Albanian rebels Wednesday, threatening to blow
apart the fragile multi-ethnic coalition
government less than a day after it was created.
As army guns poured heavy fire on villages
snatched last week by the self-proclaimed NLA
(NLA), the Party for Democratic Prosperity said
it might quit the government if no ceasefire
were announced in three days. The PDP had
demanded a unilateral army ceasefire as the
price for its cooperation, but signed up Tuesday
to the new broad coalition despite an
intensification of bombardments later in the
day. "Our attitude is negative for the time
being since one of our preconditions for
participation was that the bombardment ends in
the Kumanovo region," said PDP Secretary General
Muhamed Halili. "In three days things should
become clear and we will take a decision,
negative or positive, on our participation in a
broad coalition," said Halili. He said the
government had promised a "short ceasefire"
Tuesday, when the coalition was announced, which
had "not been respected." (AFP) Asked what PDP's
stand is for the representing of the NLA in this
government, PDP's spokesman Zahir Bekteshi said
that PPD is principally for a political solution
of the crises, but they also see the possibility
of all factors joining together preventing the
slipping into an abyss. "There us still time for
the created wounds to not deepen, giving
dialogue a chance. PDP cannot blindly enter the
government while Albanian civilians and their
homes continue to be shelled in Macedonia,"
Bekteshi told KosovaLive Wednesday. According to
Bekteshi, the main Albanian party of the
opposition in Macedonia demands from future
government partners and the international factor
to guarantee the Albanians an end to the war and
the altering of the Constitution before forming
a joint government. "We demand a guarantee from
those who give the orders, because it is
important to know how we see the new government.
The generator of the crises is a political
system in Macedonia that does not correspond
with the ethnic reality." (KosovaLive) "We are
waiting today for a confirmation of our demands
which have to be guaranteed by international
institutions and Macedonian authorities. A
decision will be taken tomorrow," said Aziz
Pollozhani, vice-president of the Party of
Democratic Prosperity (PDP). (Los Angeles Times)
An artillery and mortar bombardment boomed
across pastures towards hills where the rebels
from the NLA are positioned, despite reports
that a ceasefire deal between the government and
the main Albanian opposition PDP was close.
Stevo Pendarovski, spokesman for Macedonia's
Interior Ministry said: "Formally speaking, a
ceasefire has not been announced." Under the
ceasefire deal apparently under discussion, the
army would stop shelling rebel positions in the
northeast and give the NLA fighters 72 hours to
withdraw from the villages they occupied last
week. Security forces would then move in.
(Independent)
CIVILIANS STAY PUT AS SHELLS RAIN DOWN
<color><param>0100,0100,0100</p=
aram>
</color>The radio broadcast appeals in Macedonian and
Albanian for civilians in the northeastern
Kumanovo area, where the latest fighting is
concentrated, to leave urgently, either toward
neighboring Kosovo or deeper inside Macedonia.
The deadline was 10 a.m. (4 a.m. EDT). The
appeal, broadcast every 30 minutes, also urged
the guerrillas to surrender and let civilians
go. Government broadcasts urge civilians to
leave, either to Kumanovo or across into United
Nations-administered Kosovo, a Yugoslav province
with an overwhelmingly Albanian population. Some
7,600 ethnic Albanians fled to Kosovo in the
past week, said Amanda Williamson of the UNHCR
refugee agency. "We are extremely concerned that
people are staying in the villages ... We've
never had such a situation," she said. Young men
leaving for Kosovo said they were singled out
and roughly interrogated by police over
suspected "terrorist" links.
(L<color><param>0100,0100,0100</param>os Ange=
les Times)
The government and International Red Cross have
offered safe passage out, yet the women and
children don't leave. Theirs is a collective act
of defiance, determination or terror that has
enormously frustrated the Macedonian government
and astounded the few foreign aid workers who
have visited this town since the army began an
offensive against ethnic Albanian rebels in this
region last week. More than 1,000 civilians
remain in this town and surrounding ones for
reasons that are not clear. According to the
Macedonian government, guerrillas who control
their towns have ordered them to stay put. But
some may remain out of resolve to press for the
Albanians' political goals, including better
jobs, more political power and more schooling in
their own language. For whatever reason, they
are functioning as human shields in a combat
zone. Their continued presence means the army
cannot pursue the all-out war and ground assault
it says is necessary to defeat the rebels and
stamp out a new full-scale ethnic conflict in
the Balkans. In brief interviews in the basement
here, several women voiced support for the
rebellion. But with armed fighters standing over
them, it was not possible to know if they
genuinely felt that way. (The Washington Post)
</color>Another 2,000 terrified Albanian civilians,
mainly women and children, fled into Kosovo
yesterday after 4,000 arrived on Monday. Many
trudged along narrow dirt roads through mountain
passes, carrying suitcases hastily stuffed with
clothes and family mementos.
(Guardian)<color><param>0100,0100,0100</para=
m> </color>"The
government has to face reality," said a rebel
leader, Commander Sokoli.
<color><param>0100,0100,0100</param>"It has to f=
ace us."
Sokoli said the civilians were "a burden to us
as well. We have asked them to leave. But they
are resolved to stay here". (</color>Cape Times)
Thousands of frightened villagers have been
streaming from Vaksince and other villages north
of the capital, Skopje, into neighboring Kosovo.
Many said they left behind homes that were
leveled in the army offensive. =93People are in a
very difficult situation =97 they=92re dangerously
exposed to ongoing hostilities,=94 Amanda
Williamson, spokeswoman for the International
Committee of the Red Cross, said Wednesday. She
said the fighting was hampering efforts to
deliver food and other aid to the refugees.
(MSNBC)<color><param>0100,0100,0100</param>
HALICI: THE REVELS UNAFFECTED, THE VILLAGES
RUINED
The government claims its offensive has pushed
most of the rebels into NATO-occupied Kosovo and
other parts of Serbia. But a drive along hilly
roads showed rebels in control of a long swath
of Macedonian territory northwest of the city of
Kumanovo, encompassing a string of Albanian-
majority villages 20 miles long. They include
Otla, Lipkovo, Lojane, Orizare, Vaksince and
Slupcane. The army knows this, and these
villages -- with a combined population of 26,000
before the insurrection -- have been its
principal artillery targets. A seventh village,
Matejce, this afternoon had rebels at one edge
and Macedonian troops -- plus an armored
personnel carrier equipped with a cannon -- at
the other. The rebels raced two cars and a truck
filled with food partway through the village
today before the vehicles were shot up and
abandoned. Husamedin Halici, the ethnic Albanian
mayor of Lipkovo, said in an interview in
Kumanovo that he has not visited the town for
two days. But he said that so far, "I have no
information that the [rebels] were affected by
the offensive, only that the villages were
ruined." (The Washington Post)</color>
BRITAIN URGES ESTABLISHMENT OF MACEDONIA
COALITION
Britain said on Thursday it was gravely
concerned by delays in establishing a broad
coalition government in Macedonia where the army
is fighting ethnic Albanian guerrillas. =93Every
passing day increases the risk of deepening
divisions between Macedonia's different ethnic
communities,=94 a Foreign Office spokesman said.
Britain, which has played a leading role in
peacekeeping efforts in the Balkans, urged the
PDP to accept an invitation to join the
coalition government. =93A combined effort by all
the democratic forces in Macedonia is necessary
to demonstrate the complete repudiation of the
terrorist acts of the rebels,=94 the spokesman
said. =93Democratic dialogue provides the only
means of finding long-term solutions which will
be acceptable to all the people of Macedonia.=94
(Reuters)
<color><param>0100,0100,0100</param>TURKISH FOREIGN MINISTER
TO VISIT MACE=
DONIA,
KOSOVO<bold>
</bold>Turkey's Foreign Minister will visit Macedonia
and neighboring Kosovo amid spiraling violence
between ethnic Albanian rebels and Macedonian
forces, diplomats said on Wednesday. NATO-member
Turkey, which has a small stretch of territory
in the Balkans, takes a close strategic interest
in the region, with which it has historic and
ethnic ties. Foreign Minister Ismail Cem is to
travel to Kosovo on Thursday for meetings with
ethnic Turkish and Albanian leaders. The ethnic
Albanian province is legally part of Serb-
dominated Yugoslavia but has been under de facto
international rule since June 1999. Cem is also
to visit Skopje for meetings with Macedonian
President Boris Trajkovski and Prime Minister
Ljubco Georgievski, officials said. Trajkovski
was scheduled to visit Ankara this week to meet
President Ahmet Necdet Sezer and Prime Minister
Bulent Ecevit, but called off the trip to remain
in Skopje amid efforts to form a national unity
government. (Reuters)
c) SUPPLEMENT 1: HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH LETTER TO
MACEDONIAN PRESIDENT BORIS TRAJKOVSKI
May 4,2001
President Boris Trajkovski
11 Oktomvri b.b.
1000, Skopje
Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia
Your Excellency,
Human Rights Watch is a privately funded
international non-governmental
organization dedicated to documenting human
rights abuses throughout the world. In the past
ten years, we have committed substantial time
and effort to investigating violations of human
rights and humanitarian law in the former
Yugoslavia. We have documented violations of
international humanitarian law by all sides of
the armed conflicts in Croatia, Bosnia, Kosovo,
and the NATO war with the Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia. Reports of the renewed conflict in
the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia
between security forces and armed groups of
ethnic Albanians raise concerns relating to
adherence to international humanitarian law. As
in all other conflicts on the territory of the
former Yugoslavia, our principal concern is that
all parties involved respect civilian immunity
and ensure the protection of civilians.
Human Rights Watch wants to express its concern
that Macedonian authorities take all measures to
ensure that security forces comply with basic
principles of international humanitarian law
applicable to situations of internal armed
conflict, and enshrined in Common Article 3 of
the Geneva Conventions. This provision protects
those who do not take an active part in
hostilities from the most serious violations,
including acts of murder, torture and cruel
treatment, the taking of hostages, outrages upon
personal dignity, and the passing of sentences
and the carrying out of executions without
previous judgement pronounced by a regularly
constituted court. This concern is strengthened
by our findings following the March 2001 actions
by the security forces against armed ethnic
Albanian groups in the western part of the
country. Available evidence suggests that
government
forces were responsible for the deliberate
killing of 16-year-old Omer
Shabani on April 3 in the village of Selce. We
also received reports that families of ethnic
Albanians arrested on suspicion of membership in
the so-called National Liberation Army (NLA)
were unable to obtain any information on the
whereabouts of their relatives. Finally, our
documentation suggests that government forces
were responsible for the
wanton destruction and looting of villages
perceived as being pro-NLA,
including the villages of Selce, Gjermo, Gajre,
Drenovec, and Kolte. We
urge you to make these incidents the subject of
prompt, thorough, and
transparent investigations. With regard to the
renewed fighting, Macedonian authorities should
also prohibit all attacks against civilians,
attacks and reprisals against civilian objects,
as well as threats of violence the primary
purpose of which is to spread terror among the
civilian population. We call on the government
of the FYR Macedonia to take all available
measures to prevent the displacement of
civilians. We also call on the authorities to
ensure that the civilian population of the
affected areas enjoys maximum protection against
the dangers of harm resulting from the military
operations. The most fundamental principle of
the laws of war requires that combatants be
distinguished from noncombatants, and that
military objectives be distinguished from
protected property or protected places. Parties
to a conflict must direct their operations only
against military
objectives (including combatants).
In this respect we wish to remind Macedonian
authorities that the
provisions of Protocol I additional to the
Geneva Conventions that prohibit indiscriminate
warfare are considered to be norms of customary
international law. These provisions are binding
on all parties to a
conflict, regardless of whether it is an
international or internal armed conflict.
Indiscriminate attacks are "those which are not
directed against a military objective," "those
which employ a method or means of combat which
cannot be directed at a specific military
objective," or "those which employ a method or
means of combat the effects of which cannot be
limited as required by the Protocol," "and
consequently, in each such case, are of a nature
to strike military objectives and civilians or
civilian objects without distinction."
We also note that the jurisdiction of the
International Criminal Tribunal for the former
Yugoslavia (ICTY) applies to serious violations
of international humanitarian law committed
after 1991 in the territory of the former
Yugoslavia, including FYR Macedonia. Human
Rights Watch acknowledges the obligation of the
armed Albanian groups to uphold the same
standards of international humanitarian law and
urges their adherence to these norms. A letter
expressing Human Rights Watch's concerns to this
effect is being sent to the NLA.
We hope, Mr. President, that you will give
serious thought to the points addressed in this
letter and, guided by consideration for human
life and well-being, do everything in your power
to ensure respect for Macedonia's obligations
under international law.
Respectfully,
Holly Cartner
Executive Director
Europe and Central Asia Division
cc: Mrs. Carla Del Ponte, Chief Prosecutor, ICTY
d) SUPPLEMENT 2: HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH LETTER TO
NLA POLITICAL SPOKESMAN ALI AHMETI
May 4, 2001
Mr. Ali Ahmeti
Political Spokesman for the National Liberation
Army (NLA)
Dear Mr. Ahmeti,
Human Rights Watch is a privately funded
international non-governmental
organization dedicated to documenting human
rights abuses throughout the world. In the past
ten years, we have committed substantial time
and effort to investigating violations of human
rights and humanitarian law in the former
Yugoslavia. We have documented violations of
international humanitarian law by all sides of
the armed conflicts in Croatia, Bosnia, Kosovo,
and the NATO war with the Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia. Reports of the renewed conflict in
the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia
between security forces and armed groups of
ethnic Albanians raise concerns relating to
adherence to international humanitarian law. As
in all other conflicts in the territory of the
former Yugoslavia, our principal concern is that
all parties involved respect civilian immunity
and ensure the protection of civilians.
Human Rights Watch wants to express its concern
that the groups organized under the name of
National Liberation Army (NLA) take all measures
to comply with basic principles of international
humanitarian law applicable to situations of
internal armed conflict, and enshrined in Common
Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions. This
provision protects those who do not take an
active part in hostilities from the most serious
violations, including acts of murder, torture
and cruel treatment, the taking of hostages,
outrages upon personal dignity, and the passing
of sentences and the carrying out of executions
without previous judgement pronounced by a
regularly constituted court.
With regard to the renewed fighting, the NLA
leadership should refrain from any attacks
against civilians, attacks and reprisals against
civilian objects, as well as threats of violence
the primary purpose of which is to spread terror
among the civilian population.
We also call on the NLA leadership to ensure
that the civilian population of the affected
areas enjoys as much protection as possible
against dangers of harm resulting from the
fighting. The most fundamental principle of the
laws of war requires that combatants be
distinguished from noncombatants, and that
military objectives be distinguished from
protected property or protected places. Parties
to a conflict must direct their operations only
against military objectives (including
combatants). Also, the use of civilians as
shields for defensive positions, to hide
military objectives or to screen attacks,
violates the principles of the international
humanitarian law.
We also note that the jurisdiction of the
International Criminal Tribunal for the former
Yugoslavia (ICTY) applies to serious violations
of international humanitarian law committed
after 1991 on the territory of the former
Yugoslavia, including the former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia. Human Rights Watch also
recognizes the obligations of the Macedonian
security forces to uphold the standards of
international humanitarian law and urges their
adherence to these norms. Letters expressing
Human Rights Watch's concerns to this effect are
being sent to the president and the prime
minister of the former Yugoslav Republic of
Macedonia.
We hope, Mr. Ahmeti, that you will give serious
thought to the points
addressed in this letter and, guided by
consideration for human life and well-being, do
everything in your power to ensure that the NLA
respects obligations under international
humanitarian law.
Respectfully,
Holly Cartner
Executive Director
Europe and Central Asia Division
cc: Mrs. Carla Del Ponte, Chief Prosecutor,
ICTY
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